Starters
in sentence
1017 examples of Starters in a sentence
For starters, I got to admit that I haven't seen a Takashi Miike film that I didn't like.
(Part I, just for starters.)
For starters, at the onset of the crisis, then-IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn was a leading candidate to become President of France.
For starters, the coherence of Europe’s policies toward Russia improved: the EU threatened to use the World Trade Organization’s dispute-settlement mechanism when the Kremlin announced new protectionist measures in late 2012.
For starters, they can establish committees of outside experts or commission regular external reviews of policy and the policymaking process.
For starters, a no-confidence vote in Germany cannot succeed unless an alternative candidate wins the backing of an absolute majority in the Bundestag.
For starters, while it would likely cause the renminbi to strengthen, the consensus in China is that the current exchange rate is not far from the equilibrium level, meaning that the appreciation would likely be moderate.
For starters, people tend to think of taxes as a loathsome infringement on their freedom, as if petty bureaucrats will inevitably squander the increased revenue on useless and ineffective government employees and programs.
For starters, assume that the Conservative Party remains petrified about choosing a new leader or holding another general election.
For starters, construction costs for solar power plants are finally low enough to produce electricity at a competitive, stable price for more than 25 years.
For starters, growth over the last four decades was spurred mainly by the entry of new firms, rather than the restructuring of old ones.
For starters, the entry of China’s massive labor force into the global market economy changed the power balance between capital and labor in the advanced economies.
For starters, the world’s investors declared loud and clear in 2008 that they were not concerned about the sustainability of US deficits.
For starters, the aid community must be smarter about how it solicits and allocates resources like food and funding.
For starters, there is the convergence argument.
For starters, Rwanda has established a collaborative, cluster approach to governance that allows us to achieve more with the same amount of funding.
For starters, the household registration (hukou) system will be reformed.
For starters, the money saved from a reduction in subsidies or an increase in taxes in the oil sector could be used either to reduce budget deficits or to fund desirable spending (such as US highway construction and maintenance).
For starters, governments must recognize that central banks, however well they have served their economies, cannot go it alone.
It is no less important to address the causes of economic alienation, which means, for starters, providing better public services for disadvantaged communities, and investing in education, technology, and high-wage, high-skill jobs.
For starters, Japan is a participant in the US-led sanctions that were imposed on Russia after it annexed Crimea in March 2014.
For starters, there is the public-good element of many infrastructure projects, which demands contingent government obligations like universal coverage levels for basic services.
For starters, the US recovery remains weak.
For starters, countries need to reform their bankruptcy laws.
For starters, a phenomenon known as premature deindustrialization is taking hold, with manufacturing growth in developing countries peaking at much lower levels of income than in the past.
For starters, monetary-policy normalization in the developed economies – a process that has now been underway for 30 months in the US – looks likely to continue at a slow pace, owing to adverse demographics, high debt levels, and weak productivity growth.
For starters, while liberation from the “original sin” mitigates the need to tighten policy pro-cyclically during externally driven shocks, it also means that the burden of any requisite adjustments will fall disproportionately on exchange rates, rather than on domestic interest rates.
For starters, the EU insists on settling the divorce terms before discussing any future relationship.
For starters, national politics in key countries is largely moving away from cooperation, with rising inequality and social fragmentation making it difficult for governments, especially in democracies, to make tough decisions.
For starters, we have since lived through two disastrous wars, a Great Depression, and a Cold War.
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